Open Primaries

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Lenora Fulani: No More Fergusons Means No More Partisan Manipulation (reddingnewsreview.com)

No More Fergusons Means No More Partisan
Manipulation

By Dr. Lenora Fulani

Sept. 5, 2014, 6 p.m. - Grief
can be a terrible blinder. Tears of rage and sorrow can fill
our eyes and make it hard to see, even though we have the
experience that we have become more lucid, more knowing and more
capable in the face of tragedy. My fear is that the death of
Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and Eric Garner in New York
will make us, will make black people blind and will foster
illusions about the political actions we must take. We should
not allow that to happen.

Election Day is two months away. The
messengers of the political status quo, known to us as the
Democratic Party, are knocking on our doors, ringing us on our
cell phones, texting us and stuffing our mailboxes with fliers.
Remember Ferguson, they say. We must make things right in
America, so be sure to come out and vote in record numbers in
Georgia, in North Carolina, in Arkansas and Louisiana, and vote
for Democratic candidates for the US Senate. At all costs, we
are told, preserve the Democratic majority in the Senate. Read more of Redding News Review here

Congressman
John Lewis, whom I deeply admire and whose service to the cause
of civil rights and voting rights is legendary, is among those
now on the stump. "Ferguson has made it crystal clear to the
African-American community and others that we've got to go to
the polls," he said. Rev. Al Sharpton, with whom I just marched
in Staten Island and who had me speak at his rally there,
observed, "People feel like they would be betraying the spirit
of what happened in Ferguson, as well as enabling this
impeachment rhetoric, if there's a low turnout.” We are truly
caught in the crossfire. How? Because we, who have been
victimized by a profound and never-ending racial violence, are
to be blamed if we do not turn out in record numbers to prevent
the Democratic Party from losing seats in the US Senate. Who
made up those rules? Not us, that's for sure.

It is well known in the Black
community and in political circles that I am an independent. I
ran for president twice as an independent in 1988 and 1992. In
the first run I became the only African American and only woman
to access the ballot in all 50 states. In the second, I used my
candidacy to forge an alliance with the Perot movement and
through the founding of the Reform Party propelled the earliest
development of a new movement for political reform, one aimed at
opening the electoral process to include independent voters of
all racial backgrounds and political persuasions. This was based
on the belief that the political parties - Democrat and
Republican - were becoming completely vested in their own
self-preservation and less willing or able to address the crisis
of rising poverty, the breakdown of social infrastructure, and
to reverse an interventionist foreign policy that undermines
peace. Read more of Redding News Review hereToday 42 percent of Americans are independents and that
includes many, many Black, Latino and Asian voters, especially young people.
The political system is very hostile to these voters, locking us out of
primary voting in many states, forcing us into a second class status as
participants in the political process. I have appealed to the Black
community on many occasions to use its power to be independent as a means of
leveraging our interests.

Recently, when Black voters cast ballots in the
Republican primary runoff in Mississippi against the far right Tea Party
candidate and for a moderate Republican, the whole world took notice.
Mississippi is a state with an open primary, where all voters can choose
which primary to vote in. Through this system Black voters were able to slam
the door on right wing extremists.

In New York City in 2005, through the NYC
Independence Party, I led a powerful coalition of Black and Latino
independents and Democrats to pull 47 percent of black voters away from the
Democratic Party and for Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Democratic Party bigwigs
from Hillary Clinton to Eliot Spitzer (remember him?) went on a rampage to
undercut the independent movement. We survived, but the message to the
Black community was clear. Stay put, politically speaking, or you will pay a
serious price. For the most part, we have stayed put. And we continue to
pay a heavy price for that immobility, do we not?

These instances of exercising independent
political power were just the faintest beginnings of what can and should be
a tool for Black empowerment. It's old news that we are taken for granted
by the Democrats and that our political power is greatly diminished by being
entirely predictable. Need I mention that the Governor of Missouri and the
Mayor of New York City are both Democrats? Missouri and New York are where
the two recent episodes of the excessive use of force by police took place.
And yet we are being asked, some would say coerced, to buy the idea that
the Democratic Party is our savior and the Republican Party is evil
incarnate. Neither is true.

Each party represents a segment of the American
public and both want to prevent new forces and new alignments from changing
the game. This is why the growing movement for political reform - in
particular that wing which is focused on reforming the primary system to
downgrade the power of the parties and upgrade the power of the voters - is
so important. I am a strong supporter of that movement and I want the Black
community to join me in doing that. That is how we build our political
power. We need to be part of new coalitions, with diverse interests that
develop our capacity to grow our political strength. We need a system that
encourages—rather than represses—new coalitions.

Barack Obama, who was elected president by
winning the support of independent voters in the Democratic Primary in
sufficient numbers to defeat Hillary Clinton, will be leaving office in two
years. Electing him was a great accomplishment for the nation and for Black
America. His ability to lead, however, was greatly impaired by the demands
the Democratic Party placed on him to re-enforce its power. He turned down
many overtures from the progressive wing of the independent movement to
develop a new majority coalition and this has greatly weakened the country
and, ironically, the Black community. Sadly enough, the legacy of America's
first black president may be to leave the Black community more isolated,
deprived and underdeveloped than it has been for 60 years. Black people
feel very protective of Barack Obama. He is Black, and he has come under
vicious attack from the Right Wing. But the Democratic Party opportunizes
off of that and tries to extend it to require loyalty to the party above all
else. Promoting the idea that justice for Ferguson means voting for
Democrats is one more manipulation in that game.

As far as the upcoming Senate races are
concerned, my message to the black community is this. Make sure the
candidate you support gives their support to all forms of voter mobility -
open primaries, nonpartisan primaries, nonpartisan redistricting, etc. No
voter, regardless of race, political creed or color, should be required to
join a political party in order to participate in an election. That is a
violation of the most fundamental of voting rights!

Nothing can bring Michael Brown or Eric Garner
back to life. Both were poor Black males, like millions of others, for whom
this country cannot find a place, other than in jail or in the grave. We
must be willing to make real and significant changes in the way our
political process works if we mean to take these deaths seriously. The same
slogans, the same funeral grief, and the same voting patterns simply are not
enough.

Recently, in response to pressure from
independents and the nonpartisan reform movement, New York Senator Charles
Schumer, the head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
responsible for electing Democrats to the US Senate, reversed his prior
position and publicly endorsed a Top Two nonpartisan election system in
which all voters - Independents, Democrats, Republicans, third party members
- get to vote in every round of every election. This is a sign of the
growing strength of that movement, a movement in which my very dear friend
and colleague Jacqueline Salit is a major leader.

However, the conventional wisdom is that Black
people will not rally to this cause, that we have one and only one political
home and that is in the Democratic Party, so the inclusion of non-Democrats
is of no value to us. We must defy that conventional wisdom! First of all,
many of us are independents –about 31 percent according to some polls. And
second, we need to coalesce with other Americans who share our belief that
the system is no longer working for the American people. 63% of
independents in New York, according to a recent Quinnipiac Poll, say that
thedeath of Eric Garner "was a tragic thing and there is
absolutely no excuse for how the police acted." My colleagues Dr. Jessie Fields and Alvaader
Frazier, Esq, are leading a campaign directed at Schumer demanding that he
lead the fight for nonpartisan elections in New York. Hundreds of
signatures were gathered in just a few hours at Harlem Week. The Black
community is hungry to find new ways of expressing ourselves. We must do
more than go to funerals and weep, but then turn a blind eye to the
political changes that must occur. We must free up the Black community to
become more powerful. Join me in building a national Black Reformers
Network.

Dr. Lenora Fulani
is a developmental psychologist, education innovator and the country’s
leading political independent. In 2006, she initiated Operation
Conversation: Cops and Kids, a successful, alternative approach to
addressing police / community relations.